Football

Cignetti warns college football’s future is at risk amid rising costs and new legislation

Indiana coach voices caution as bipartisan bill proposes salary caps and stricter transfer rules

Indiana University football coach Curt Cignetti has warned that the sport as we know it may not survive in its current form, citing escalating financial pressures that threaten the stability of college programs across the nation.

A cautionary voice from Indiana

His caution comes as Senators Maria Cantwell and Ted Cruz introduced the Protect College Sports Act of 2026, a bipartisan effort that proposes a hard salary cap, stricter enforcement mechanisms and a one‑time transfer rule, aiming to bring order to a landscape where compensation demands are spiraling out of control.

Cignetti acknowledges that paying players is inevitable, but he warns that many universities simply cannot shoulder the resulting expenses, a reality that could force institutions to reconsider the viability of fielding competitive teams.

During the Big Ten’s annual spring meetings, commissioner Tony Petitti outlined the conference’s ambition to expand the College Football Playoff to 24 teams, a move that Cignetti publicly backs, while emphasizing his reluctance to weigh in on the finer details of upcoming rule changes.

Speaking at an event in Bloomington, the coach reiterated his support for the Big Ten’s direction, yet stopped short of endorsing any specific legislative provisions, underscoring the delicate balance between ambition and fiscal reality.

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